Epstein Victims
Date Range
Score Range
Symbolically included through memorialization, but voice excluded from narrative
[selective_quotation] and [sympathy_appeal]: The victims are honored via candles and scale, but their individual stories are noted as 'smoothed over,' and no direct survivor voices are quoted beyond Giuffre’s death.
“When you look at that and each one of those is a life, you’re like, ‘How is it that he wasn’t stopped after 10 or 20 or 200 or 500 or 1,000?’”
Epstein victims excluded from royal accountability, their absence highlighted as a moral failing
[misleading_context] and [omission] frame Charles’s failure to meet victims as a notable silence, juxtaposing the 9/11 ceremony with proximity to Epstein sites to imply evasion of justice.
“Charles laid his wreath less than a mile from the Metropolitan Correctional Center, where Epstein killed himself in 2019 while awaiting trial, and a few subway stops south of Epstein’s former home in Manhattan’s Upper East Side, where Mountbatten-Windsor was a frequent guest.”
Epstein victims framed as deserving of recognition and inclusion in public discourse
[vague_attribution]: The article claims the King will acknowledge Epstein victims 'attributed to a senior Democrat', inserting this claim without verification, thereby promoting the idea that these victims should be publicly acknowledged and included in high-level diplomatic narratives.
“The article claims the King will acknowledge Epstein victims in his speech, attributed to a senior Democrat.”
Victims mentioned as political leverage, not as subjects of inclusion
[cherry_picking], [sensationalism]
“Khanna worked with his Republican colleague Thomas Massie to spearhead efforts to force the release of the files, which also led to the arrest of Lord Mandelson, another former friend of Epstein.”